Abstract
A patient with Rasmussen's encephalitis underwent a right central resection at the age of 6 as a treatment for status epilepticus. She became seizure free, but suffered a left hemiplegia which improved so that she could walk. Because of the recurrence of seizures an enlargement of the resection to a hemispherectomy was carried out 17 years after the first operation. Various examinations, including H215O PET and amytal testing, performed before this second operation indicated that a compensatory reinforcement of the ipsilateral uncrossed corticospinal and spinocortical pathways had taken place. This was confirmed postoperatively. The patient had no new sensorimotor deficits.
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Gregor Wieser, H., Henke, K., Zumsteg, D., Taub, E., Yonekawa, Y., & Buck, A. (1999). Activation of the left motor cortex during left leg movements after right central resection. Journal of Neurology Neurosurgery and Psychiatry, 67(4), 487–491. https://doi.org/10.1136/jnnp.67.4.487